The referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequences

Editors
ORCID logoBarbara De Cock | Université catholique de Louvain
ORCID logoBettina Kluge | Hildesheim University
[Pragmatics, 26:3] 2016.  ca. 150 pp.
Publishing status: Available | Original publisher:International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)
Table of Contents
On the referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequences
Barbara De Cock and Bettina Kluge
351–360
Register, genre and referential ambiguity of personal pronouns: A cross-linguistic analysis
Barbara De Cock
361–378
A pragmatic analysis of german impersonally used first person singular ‘ICH’
Sarah Zobel
379–416
What do(es) you mean? the pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish
Torben Juel Jensen and Frans Gregersen
417–446
Pragmatic use of ancient greek pronouns in two communicative frameworks
Chiara Meluzzi
447–471
“Que bé, tu! (« that’s great, you! »)” An emerging emphatic use of the second person singular pronoun tu (you) in spoken catalan
Òscar Bladas and Neus Nogué
473–500
Generic uses of the second person singular – how speakers deal with referential ambiguity and misunderstandings
Bettina Kluge
501–522
Cited by (2)

Cited by two other publications

Escouflaire, Louis, Antonin Descampe & Cédrick Fairon
2024. Unveiling Subjectivity in Press Discourse: A Statistical and Qualitative Study of Manually Annotated Articles. Discours 34 DOI logo
Portillo Fernández, Jesús
2024. Usos connotativos e intencionales del discurso en español formulado en primera persona del plural. Análisis pragmático e inferencial. Moenia DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects

Main BIC Subject

CFG: Semantics, Pragmatics, Discourse Analysis

Main BISAC Subject

LAN009000: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General